> > *That's why .ig doesn't cause subsequent lines to be ignored.*
Uh, actually, I completely forgot about that macro... That actually *can* be handled in a line-based fashion, because TextMate operates by opening "scopes" in response to patterns. Thanks for picking up on that! *And why \\fB inside a .de is treated as \fB.* That was actually a conscious exception on my part. Many roff macros need heavy escaping, so I made all `\` characters match as one character. For syntax themes that recognise punctuation characters, this can have a huge improvement to readability: [image: Inline images 1] So the expected result of \fB inside a `.de` block would, of course, be that the text inside is emboldened. *Why is .PS orange versus .PE's purple?* Hrm, could you show me where you're seeing that, please? =) BTW, I'm still finishing off some rough edges - specifically, adding highlighting for Pic and other preprocessors. On 22 July 2016 at 22:55, Ralph Corderoy <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi John, > > Nice work. > > > Yes, a limitation in highlighting is that each regular expression is > > scoped to one line at once, so there's no possibility of knowing > > what's on the next line, or what was on the previous line. This is > > done by the TextMate-grammar engine for performance reasons, but it > > also makes working with line-based languages like Roff a nightmare. > > Understood. That's why .ig doesn't cause subsequent lines to be > ignored. And why \\fB inside a .de is treated as \fB. Why is .PS > orange versus .PE's purple? > > Cheers, Ralph. >
